Failure to Assess and Honor Food Preferences
Summary
The facility failed to assess resident food preferences and failed to provide food that matched resident preferences for three residents reviewed for food services. The report states these failures placed residents at risk for hunger, nutrient deficiency, and diminished quality of life. The cited regulatory references were WAC 388-97-1120(2)(a), -1100(1), and -1140(6). Resident 75 and Resident 76, both recently admitted, reported that no one had discussed their food preferences with them when they first arrived. Resident 75 said they had not been able to eat most of the food because they were supposed to be on a diabetic diet, and their breakfast tray included pancakes with packaged syrup, sausage, and packaged brown sugar. Resident 75 ate one pancake without syrup, half the sausage, and did not open the brown sugar, stating they did not like pancakes or sausage and had asked for sugar free syrup but was told the facility did not carry it. Resident 76 said the food was often cold and that half the time they did not eat it because they did not know what it was and no alternatives had been provided. On the following day, Resident 75 said the Dietary Manager had only recently interviewed them and their roommate about food preferences and had documented likes and dislikes, but the promised alternative menu had not been brought back. Resident 75’s breakfast tray contained only an English muffin with two sugar-based jellies and no butter or other foods, and Resident 75 said they needed protein such as cheese or cottage cheese to have strength for physical therapy. Resident 76’s tray contained an English muffin and one piece of bacon with no butter or jellies, and Resident 76 said they had eaten only the bacon. A CNA confirmed that butter should have been offered with the trays, but neither resident had butter on their plates and the CNA did not return to offer it or any alternative. Resident 75’s lunch tray contained pasta, a breadstick, cauliflower, and a banana, and Resident 75 said they did not eat bananas and that the meal had too many carbohydrates for them. Resident 75 said they needed protein and would have preferred the alternative meal but had never been asked. Resident 11, who had chronic kidney disease and was independently able to make decisions, reported that food tasted like mud because of their kidney disease and that the facility was pureeing food even though they could have soft food. Their meal ticket showed soft and bite sized food, but observations showed meals with some diced or mashed items and the rest of the plate pureed. Resident 11 said they disliked pureed food, had told staff from day one they would not eat it, and did not know where the pureed orders came from. The record showed the last food preference evaluation for Resident 11 was dated 12/01/2025 during a previous stay, and staff acknowledged that food preferences should have been obtained on admission.
Penalty
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